Sunday, February 10, 2008

Waste Management Inc. Virginia USA - Leachate Spill Settlement

State's largest landfill fined for garbage juice spill

Originally Posted to: Environment News Virginia

By Scott Harper, The Virginian-Pilot, © February 12, 2008

The owner of the state's largest landfill, in Sussex County, has agreed to pay a $14,250 fine for an environmental accident in 2006, when some 8,000 gallons of garbage juice - known as leachate - spilled into wetlands.

It is the first time that the Atlantic Waste Disposal Inc. landfill, owned by trash-giant Waste Management Inc., has been in trouble with the state Department of Environmental Quality, according to records and officials.

Under the terms of a proposed settlement, the company would pay the fine, assess any environmental harm from the spill and adopt better monitoring of ammonia and other pollutants that might wash off its massive landfill and taint neighboring lands and waters.

Spread across more than 1,300 acres near Waverly, on the western outskirts of Hampton Roads, the private facility accepts the most trash of any landfill in Virginia, said Bill Hayden, a state environmental department spokesman.

Under its state permit, the Atlantic Waste Disposal site can take out-of-state garbage, in-state trash, sludge, scrap metal and industrial debris - but not medical waste, asbestos or hazar dous waste.

It is one of several landfills constructed in the 1990s east of Interstate 95 that have made Virginia the second-largest importer of household garbage in the country. Pennsylvania is No. 1.
According to the proposed written settlement, the accident occurred Nov. 9, 2006. The leachate was being pumped into a tanker truck, but the driver fell asleep and some 8,000 gallons overflowed onto the ground, said Michael P. Kearns, district manager for Atlantic Waste Disposal Inc.

"He woke up and there was stuff running all over the place," Kearns said. "He came and told us right away."

The juice ran off a loading pad, into a drainage ditch and settled in nearby wetlands, which are considered "waters of the state" because of their environmental importance, according to the settlement.

The company immediately contacted state environmental officials, as required by law, and a cleanup began, said Jennifer Hoeffner, a state enforcement specialist overseeing the case. More....

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